El Salvador former guerrilla in presidential vote runoff

EL SALVADOR, San Salvador : Ruling leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) candidate Salvador Sanchez Ceren delivers a speech to supporters after recieving vote results during the presidential election in San Salvador on February 2, 2014. Ceren narrowly missed victory in El Salvador’s presidency race on February 2, and will now face a run-off vote with a conservative rival, according to official results. AFP PHOTO/ Jose CABEZAS

SAN SALVADOR, February 3, 2014 (AFP) – A former leftist guerrilla narrowly missed victory in El Salvador’s presidency race Sunday, and will now face a run-off vote with a conservative rival, according to official results.

With 81 percent of the vote counted, ruling leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) candidate Salvador Sanchez Ceren had nearly 49 percent of the vote, just missing the 50 percent needed to avoid a runoff.

He will now face former San Salvador mayor Norman Quijano, 67, of the conservative Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) in a second round of voting on March 9, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal said.

“They gave us a triumph in the first round and we’re sure that in the second round the difference will not be 10 points, it will be more than 10 points, it will be a great victory,” Sanchez Ceren told reporters.

Quijano, who obtained nearly 39 percent of the vote, is hoping to eke out a victory with support from smaller conservative parties that did poorly in Sunday’s election.

Having made it to a run-off vote “is proof that we can win,” Quijano told a group of supporters, adding that he was ready for the “great battle” on March 9.

Sanchez Ceren, 69, is the country’s vice president and is hoping to succeed President Mauricio Funes, also of the FMLN.

Voting took place without major violence in the poverty-stricken country, and election authorities said the turnout was lower than in previous elections.

The small but densely populated Central American country of six million is plagued by brazen gang violence and still burdened by the legacy of its bitter 1979-1992 civil war.

Tackling rampant violence and poverty

After ending the conservatives’ 20-year hold on the country with Funes’s 2009 election, the FMLN nominated Ceren, a civil war-era guerrilla commander, in a bid to shore up a country crippled by rampant crime and high poverty.

“Whoever wins needs to be aware that in this country the cost of living is high, there’s no work and the maras are harassing us — an overwhelming task awaits,” said voter Argentina Campos, 41.

Sanchez Ceren has promised an inclusive government and speaks of a “grand national accord.”